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Hotels can refuse to serve tap water, Italy's top court rules

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Hotel Sassongher declined to comment, while the lawyer for the tourist did ​not immediately respond to a request for ​comment.

MILAN (Reuters) - Italian hotels can refuse to serve their guests tap water, Italy's highest court ruled ​in response to a tourist's complaint against a ‌luxury hotel in a ski resort in the Dolomites.

The tourist sued the five-star Hotel Sassongher in Corvara, where she ​stayed for the 2020 New Year holidays, after ​it refused to give her tap water ⁠during meals, offering instead mineral water at €7 ($8.15) per ​bottle.

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She sought more than €2,700 in damages.

In a ruling issued ​in late April but reported by national media this week, the Court of Cassation said Italian law did not oblige ​bars or restaurants to serve tap water to ​customers, upholding the earlier findings of two lower courts.

The claimant had ‌argued ⁠that, under "constitutional and national sources", water is a natural good and a universal human right, and that the free provision of a minimum amount necessary ​to meet essential ​needs must ⁠be guaranteed.

Hotel Sassongher declined to comment, while the lawyer for the tourist did ​not immediately respond to a request for ​comment.

There ⁠is no single European law requiring all member states to provide free tap water on request. The ⁠EU Drinking ​Water Directive encourages restaurants to ​serve it, but does not impose a general obligation.

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